Ana Ramirez v. Division of Employment Security

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 27, 2024
DocketWD86598
StatusPublished

This text of Ana Ramirez v. Division of Employment Security (Ana Ramirez v. Division of Employment Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ana Ramirez v. Division of Employment Security, (Mo. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT

ANA RAMIREZ, ) ) Appellant, ) WD86598 ) v. ) OPINION FILED: ) DIVISION OF EMPLOYMENT ) August 27, 2024 SECURITY, ) ) Respondent. ) )

Appeal from the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission

Before Division Two: W. Douglas Thomson, Presiding Judge, Karen King Mitchell, Judge, and Janet Sutton, Judge

Ana Ramirez (Ramirez) appeals the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission’s

(Commission) decision affirming the Appeals Tribunal’s (Tribunal) determination denying her

application for waiver of recovery of overpayment of Federal Pandemic Unemployment

Compensation (FPUC) benefits (waiver application). Specifically, Ramirez appeals the

Commission’s decision that she was at fault for the overpayment. We reverse the Commission’s

determination, finding it is not supported by competent and substantial evidence and, thus, that

Ramirez is entitled to a waiver of recovery of overpayment of her FPUC benefits. Factual and Procedural Background

The Record on Appeal

Before we discuss this case’s factual and procedural background as best as we can

discern, we first emphasize the complete administrative confusion reflected in the record.

This case before us is one of six appeals at the administrative level arising from one

claimant, Ramirez, and her receipt of state primary unemployment insurance benefits and federal

FPUC benefits in 2020. From what we glean from the record before us, the procedural history of

all six cases is murky, at best. Based on preliminary information in Ramirez’s brief, we asked

the parties to clarify which administrative appeals are pending and what legal issue each appeal

purports to address. The parties clarified as follows:

1. 2226780: Whether an assessment of overpayment of the entire underlying state unemployment benefits of $762.00 should be made. The timeliness of the appeal and good cause for failure to participate in the telephone hearing were also at issue. This appeal has since been withdrawn; 2. 2236659: Whether an order of assessment of overpayment of the entire associated FPUC benefits of $7,800.00 should be made. The timeliness of the appeal and good cause for failure to participate in the telephone hearing were also at issue. This is currently on appeal before the Commission; 3. 2236658: Whether an overpayment of the unemployment benefits of $762.00 was paid to Ramirez due to unintentional error or omission by her, and whether an assessment should be made. The timeliness of appeal was also an issue. This is currently pending before the Commission according to Ramirez. According to the Division of Employment Security (Division), however, a decision was rendered and not appealed to the Commission; 4. 2236784: Whether Ramirez was disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits because she earned wages after April 16, 2020, left work voluntarily, or was discharged for misconduct. A deputy determined she was ineligible. The timeliness of appeal and good cause for failure to participate in the telephone hearing were also at issue. The Commission issued a decision only as to finding of an untimely appeal without reaching the merits. This case is now currently on appeal to this Court in a different case, WD87145; and 5. 2226786: Whether Ramirez was overpaid FPUC benefits of $7,800.00 due to unintentional error or omission by her. The timeliness of Ramirez’s appeal and good cause for failure to participate in the telephone hearing are also at issue. This is currently before the Commission without a decision.

2 The issue before us here, whether Ramirez was entitled to waiver of recovery of

overpayment of FPUC benefits following her application, is the last procedural and substantive

domino in this chain of appeals. Yet, if the information given to us is correct, this final domino

was the only determination made final by the Commission when this appeal was filed with our

Court. Ramirez had asked to have all of her appeals consolidated but the Tribunal never ruled on

her request and, clearly, these cases were never consolidated.

Adding further to this procedural jumble, the Commission included several documents

from these five other cases in our current record on appeal. The Commission’s underlying

appeal number for this case was 2240844. Though the Commission knew case number 2240844

was currently before us, it nevertheless erroneously included several documents in the legal file

from other cases before the Tribunal or the Commission that were not part of the underlying

proceedings in case 2240844. 1 The Commission also submitted several identical copies of

documents throughout the legal file.

So confused was this record on appeal, that the Commission has since supplemented the

legal file on appeal three times. First, we granted Ramirez’s motion to order the Commission to

supplement the record to include “Claimant’s Exhibit 1” from the Tribunal’s hearing, which was

admitted into evidence without objection. The Commission supplemented the record the first

time by adding “Claimant’s Exhibit 1.”

Second, this Court requested the Commission supplement its legal file and provide us

with Ramirez’s waiver application—the central issue of this appeal—because the Commission

1 The Commission erroneously included (1) an entry of appearance in cases 2226784 and 2226786, (2) applications for review in cases 2226784 and 2226786, and (3) a five-page excerpt from a transcript in case 2226780, submitted to our Court twice.

3 neglected to include this central document. The Commission filed Ramirez’s waiver application

thereafter in a second supplemental legal file.

Third, this Court requested the Commission clarify which of the nineteen pages attached

to the end of the transcript on appeal were part of the “Division’s Exhibit 1” in the underlying

hearing for case number 2240844. Rather than clarifying which pages constituted this exhibit,

the Commission filed a third supplemental legal file including all but one page originally

attached to the transcript and labeled those pages “Division Exhibits 1.” This third supplemental

legal file also resubmitted Ramirez’s waiver application. All three supplemental legal files were

filed with this Court after the Commission certified that the initial legal file “constituted the true,

accurate, and complete record reviewed by the Commission in this matter[.]” (Emphasis added).

In addition to a piecemeal legal file, the transcript on appeal contains testimony from

three of the additional appeals before the Tribunal that were heard at the same time as this case

but not consolidated. In a hearing on June 20, 2023, the Tribunal heard four cases, with a

Benefit Program Supervisor testifying only in 2240844 and Ramirez testifying in all four. 2 The

transcript from this multi-case hearing included this case, 2240844, and appeal numbers

2226780, 2236659, and 2236658. On review of the entire transcript filed with us, it is clear the

Appeals Referee failed to keep each case legally and factually distinct during the hearing.

We cannot decipher what legal issues relating to Ramirez’s receipt of Missouri or FPUC

benefits the Tribunal intended to address in the individual appeals during the June 2023 hearing

nor what testimony pertained to each case, since the Appeals Referee frequently bounced back

and forth between the cases. Additionally, the Appeals Referee combined the discussion of the

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Ana Ramirez v. Division of Employment Security, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ana-ramirez-v-division-of-employment-security-moctapp-2024.